•  131
  •  162
    Singular terms and arithmetical logicism
    Philosophical Books 44 (3): 193--219. 2003.
    This article is a critical notice of Bob Hale and Crispin Wright's *The Reason's Proper Study* (OUP). It focuses particularly on their attempts (crucial to their neo-logicist project) to say what a singular term is. I identify problems for their account but include some constructive suggestions about how it might be improved.
  •  330
    Knowledge by deduction
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 77 (1): 61-84. 2008.
    It seems beyond doubt that a thinker can come to know a conclusion by deducing it from premisses that he knows already, but philosophers have found it puzzling how a thinker could acquire knowledge in this way. Assuming a broadly externalist conception of knowledge, I explain why judgements competently deduced from known premisses are themselves knowledgeable. Assuming an exclusionary conception of judgeable content, I further explain how such judgements can be informative. (According to the exc…Read more
  •  133
    Donald Davidson and the Mirror of Meaning
    Philosophical Quarterly 45 (178): 136. 1995.
    Review of J.E. Malpas, *Donald Davidson and the Mirror of Meaning* (CUP)
  •  1105
    This paper assesses the prospects of a pragmatist theory of content. I begin by criticising the theory presented in D.H. Mellor’s essay ‘Successful Semantics’. I then identify problems and lacunae in the pragmatist theory of meaning sketched in Chapter 13 of Dummett’s The Logical Basis of Metaphysics. The prospects are brighter, I contend, for a tempered pragmatism, in which the theory of content is permitted to draw upon irreducible notions of truth and falsity. I sketch the shape of such a…Read more
  •  259
    The categoricity problem and truth-value gaps
    Analysis 57 (4): 223-235. 1997.
    In his article 'Rejection' (1996), Timothy Smiley had shown how a logical system allowing rules of rejection could provide a categorical axiomatization of the classical propositional calculus. This paper shows how rules of rejection, when placed in a multiple conclusion setting, can also provide categorical axiomatizations of a range of non-classical calculi which permit truth-value gaps, among them the calculus in Smiley's own 'Sense without denotation' (1960).
  •  455
    Savoir Faire
    Journal of Philosophy 100 (3): 158-166. 2003.
    This paper challenges the linguistic arguments Jason Stanley and Timothy Williamson gave in support of their thesis that knowing how is a species of knowing that.
  •  165
    Old Adams Buried
    Analytic Philosophy 54 (2): 157-188. 2013.
    I present some counterexamples to Adams's Thesis and explain how they undermine arguments that indicative conditionals cannot be truth-evaluable propositions
  •  2
    15 Inference, Deduction, Logic
    Philosophical Inquiry 36 (1-2): 334. 2012.